Electricity and Gas Transmission (Compensation) Bill Clause 1
Independent mechanism to determine claims for compensation 9.25am
Question proposed, That the clause stand part of the Bill. The
Chair With this it will be convenient to discuss the following:
Amendment 2, in clause 2, page 2, line 4, leave out “applies” and
insert “extends”. This is a technical amendment replacing the
reference to application with a reference to extent....Request free trial
Electricity and Gas
Transmission (Compensation) Bill
Clause 1
Independent mechanism to determine claims for compensation
9.25am
Question proposed, That the clause stand part of the Bill.
The Chair
With this it will be convenient to discuss the following:
Amendment 2, in clause 2, page 2, line 4, leave out “applies” and
insert “extends”.
This is a technical amendment replacing the reference to
application with a reference to extent.
Amendment 3, in clause 2, page 2, line 5, leave out “on the day
on which it is passed” and insert—
“at the end of the period of two months beginning with the day on
which it is passed”.
This amendment provides for commencement two months after Royal
Assent.
Amendment 4, in clause 2, page 2, line 6, leave out “and
Gas”.
This amendment amends the Bill’s short title to reflect its
contents.
Clause 2 stand part.
New clause 1—Resolution of compensation disputes in
electricity-related land acquisition cases—
“(1) The Secretary of State must draw up proposals for the use of
alternative dispute resolution processes in electricity-related
land acquisition cases.
(2) An ‘alternative dispute resolution process’ is any process
enabling the parties to a dispute to resolve the dispute out of
court.
(3) An ‘electricity-related land acquisition case’ is a case
where—
(a) an order is made under section 114 of the Planning Act 2008
(orders granting development consent), and
(b) the order authorises the acquisition of land for a purpose
connected with the transmission of electricity.
‘Transmission’ in paragraph (b) has the meaning given in section
4(4) of the Electricity Act 1989.
(4) The Secretary of State’s proposals must include proposals for
ensuring—
(a) that alternative dispute resolution processes are available
for determining the amount of compensation to be paid to
landowners in electricity-related land acquisition cases,
(b) that the processes are accessible to landowners without undue
difficulty or expense,
(c) that the processes are operated, and determinations reached,
in a way that is independent of the parties to the dispute,
and
(d) that determinations are enforceable.
(5) The Secretary of State must lay before Parliament a report
containing the proposals drawn up under this section.
(6) Before laying the report the Secretary of State must consult
such persons as the Secretary of State considers
appropriate.”
This new clause is intended to replace clause 1. It focuses the
proposals which the Secretary of State must draw up on
electricity-related cases rather than gas-related cases. It also
contains a number of drafting and clarity-related changes.
Amendment 5, in title, line 1, leave out from beginning to end of
line 4 and insert—
“Require proposals to be drawn up for the use of alternative
dispute resolution processes to determine the compensation
payable to landowners in certain cases where land is acquired for
the purposes of electricity transmission.”
This amendment amends the Bill’s long title to reflect its
contents.
(North Somerset) (Con)
It is a pleasure, Mr Hosie, to have you chair our Committee,
which I intend to be brief.
On Second Reading, I set out the cases that form the basis for
sponsoring the Bill, and I feel no need to go through them again,
except to say that when one of my constituents approached
National Grid with a problem that was unresolved and said, “I’m
going to take it to my Member of Parliament”, he was told, “Don’t
bother. He won’t be able to do anything.” Well, here we are
today; and we will see who is able to make changes and who is
not. Generally, I find that threatening Members of Parliament,
whether directly or indirectly, is an unwise course of
action.
Apart from the cases, there was the principle: one of the largest
listed utility companies in the world cannot be judge and jury
when it comes to compensation issues relating to our
constituents. At the weekend, in my constituency I had a new case
of potential flooding, which had been warned about by local
farmers, who had said that if National Grid did not put in
adequate draining for one of the access roads, it would result in
flooding on a new estate. Sadly, in the heavy rains we saw in
recent weeks, that is exactly what we got. Again, that shows why
we need to have this sort of compensation arrangement.
I am grateful to Members on both sides of the House for the
cross-party support the Bill has received, and to the Minister
and his officials for the amount of work they have done to ensure
that we dealt with all the points and issues arising from Second
Reading. In particular, I point out a number of issues to the
Committee. First, it will now be clear—through the amendments to
the Bill—that it relates to all electricity-related, land
acquisition cases. That includes compulsory purchase and access
agreements, which might not have been clear previously.
Secondly, the tests we set to make the Bill acceptable have all
been met: the process will be accessible without undue difficulty
or expense; the processes will be operated in a way that is
independent of the parties to the dispute, so that one party is
not judge and jury, as at present; and determinations will be
enforceable. There is no point in having rights in law if they
are not enforceable, as we discussed in this room during the
passage of what is now the Down Syndrome Act 2022. In other
words, the four tests of accessibility, affordability,
independence and enforceability are all met in the Bill.
I have a few brief questions to ask the Minister to ensure
complete clarity. Will he give an assurance that the Bill will
apply to current, ongoing disputes that are not settled at the
point of commencement of the Act? We are not asking for
retrospection, which is a legal principle that I generally find
to be abhorrent, but for cases that are not concluded when the
legislation comes into effect. Will the Minister give us an
update on the intended timescale for the completion of the
Government scheme after the commencement of the Act? In other
words, how long will it be before our constituents will see the
applicability of the points that I have raised? Finally, does the
Bill apply to Scotland, and in what circumstances? Those are my
last remaining unresolved—or perhaps unclear—questions.
I am extremely grateful to the Minister and his team for getting
clarity, and a Bill that is widely accepted in the House as
necessary and in a form that the House can accept.
9.30am
(North Antrim) (DUP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Hosie.
I thank the right hon. Member for North Somerset for introducing
and sponsoring the Bill, which has my support. However, I have a
question for the Minister about clause 2 and the territorial
extent of the Bill; it is probably an obvious question. Like most
Bills in the House, whenever devolution was working, the usual
clause states that the Act will apply to England, Wales and—on
occasion—Scotland. Of course, the words “Northern Ireland” are
left out, but with the failure of devolution the Minister does
have responsibility.
I hope that the Bill will be reported today, but will the
Minister take it away, look at the issue of territorial extent to
see whether there is a gap that needs to be filled with regard to
compensation claims in Northern Ireland, and ascertain whether
that should be applied to and included in the Bill?
The Minister for Energy and Climate ()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Mr Hosie.
I thank my right hon. Friend the Member for North Somerset, and I
am sure that Members across the Committee congratulate him. He
probably snapped into it pretty easily; not only did he have the
great success of the Down Syndrome Act but, as my former boss at
the Department for International Trade for some time, seeking to
command me was something that came naturally to him. Perhaps I
have an overly built-in response, which is of course to try to do
whatever he wants.
We have made tremendous progress. I am pleased that the Bill
gained the support of Members of the House, passing Second
Reading on 25 November last year. On Second Reading, my colleague
the Minister for Industry and Investment Security, my hon. Friend
the Member for Wealden (Ms Ghani), agreed that the Government
would work with my right hon. Friend on the Bill.
The electricity network is fundamental to accelerate our
ambitions for net zero and energy security. Since taking on my
role and seeing the vast amount of technology we need to deploy,
I return again and again to the same point: if we do not get the
grid right, whatever we do is affected, whether that is space
energy; small modular nuclear reactors; hydrogen and carbon
capture, utilisation and storage; or floating offshore wind.
Whatever it is, without the grid we will not have a
transformation, which we have to do at a most remarkable
pace.
The president of the National Grid has said there will be
six-and-a-half times more investment in the grid over the next
seven years than in the previous 30. That is a massive
deployment, supply chain and financing challenge, but it is also
a political challenge, because of unprecedented imposition of
necessary infrastructure on communities up and down the land.
Ensuring that we have a system that is fit for purpose and does
not roll communities over—but rolls with communities and their
grain—is fundamental. That is why I am so grateful for the Bill.
I do not believe it will slow down that tremendously required
acceleration of deployment, but it will help to build a system
that is better able to listen to the communities we represent and
ensure that they feel part of the solution, not just subject to
it.
As I said, the network needs to be transformed at an
unprecedented scale and pace, and it needs to accommodate an
expected doubling in overall electricity demand by 2050, as we
electrify sectors including transport, heat and industry. In
order to achieve that, we committed in the British energy
security strategy to accelerate the timescale for delivering new
onshore transmission network infrastructure.
We recognise that in cases where land or land rights have been
acquired and a settlement is not agreed between landowners and
the transmission owner, challenging that via the upper tribunal
can be expensive—a point made strongly by my right hon. Friend
the Member for North Somerset. The Bill presents an opportunity
to address the issue by ensuring access to alternative dispute
resolution processes, which can play such a crucial role in
offering a quicker and more affordable route to the resolution of
disputes.
We believe that the Bill can support the transformation needed so
that we can have clean, secure and resilient energy for the Great
British people. Landowners should have access to a clear, fair,
affordable and enforceable system for dispute resolution, and I
am pleased to say that we have worked closely with my right hon.
Friend the Member for North Somerset since Second Reading and
support his amendments.
I will now touch on those amendments, which I encourage the
Committee to accept. Amendment 1 will remove clause 1, which will
be replaced by new clause 1. The new clause focuses the proposals
on electricity-related cases rather than gas-related cases. We
support that change, as the examples raised by my right hon.
Friend have related only to electricity network infrastructure
and we are not aware of issues for gas infrastructure. It seems
too early to include gas infrastructure definitively. However,
the Secretary of State has the option to expand the scope if
needed. Hon. Members have raised this issue in previous
stages.
The new clause moves from establishing a new mechanism to
encouraging the use of alternative dispute resolution processes
instead of immediately resorting to the upper tribunal. It means
that we can therefore consider existing practices, whether they
can be strengthened to meet the aims of the Bill, and whether new
processes and mechanisms may be required. The new clause retains
the key factors that the proposals must consider, which my right
hon. Friend set out: ensuring that decisions are enforceable, and
that the process is affordable and accessible. He also mentioned
independence, which is another important aspect.
Amendment 2 simply replaces “applies” with “extends” in clause
2(1), which deals with territorial extent. It is a minor
technical amendment to reflect more appropriate terminology.
Amendment 3 changes commencement to two months after Royal Assent
to bring the Bill in line with standard commencement procedure
for primary legislation. Amendment 4 removes gas from the Bill’s
short title in clause 2, in line with the focus on electricity
transmission infrastructure that I have already discussed.
Finally, amendment 5 edits the Bill’s long title to reflect its
contents in new clause 1. New clause 1 should be added to the
Bill, and clause 2, as amended, should stand part of the
Bill.
My right hon. Friend raised some questions. He rightly said that
retrospective law is typically abhorrent, but asked whether
current disputes could be resolved through whatever proposals
come forward. We would certainly want current ongoing disputes to
be covered once proposals are implemented, but, of course, we do
not yet know what those proposals are. Our intention is to
establish an alternative dispute resolution taskforce—very
grandly named—which will be responsible for putting forward
proposals, and we will have to see what ideas are generated by
that taskforce. If a dispute is still unresolved by the time that
any proposals are implemented, such cases should be able to use
any alternative dispute resolution options that result from the
Bill, if they are appropriate. If the dispute, of course, is
resolved before the proposals are implemented, any options
resulting from the Bill will not be required.
Will my right hon. Friend tell us give us a timescale for the
setting up of the taskforce?
As I have said, we will establish an alternative dispute
resolution taskforce to develop the proposals. We will ensure
that there is independent and balanced representation among
members—for example, by including landowner representatives
alongside electricity network operators. As I am sure this
Committee will be pleased to hear, we will also look to engage
closely with my right hon. Friend to ensure that he is happy with
the make-up of the taskforce. By establishing that taskforce, we
can ensure that the right expertise and balance of views is
available to consider carefully the processes and options that
will work best for landowners and electricity network
operators.
We expect to establish the taskforce in 2023. I would like to see
it sooner rather than later, and have already asked—for my
purposes, which I may or may not make public—for a timeline for
that process. Having come so far, I hope my right hon. Friend can
trust in me to ensure that we move this forward with suitable
rapidity, but if he lacks that trust I think he can trust his own
use of the mechanisms of this House to ensure that the Government
are kept honest and move in an expedited way to set up this
taskforce.
One of the first tasks of the group will be setting a scope, a
work plan and a timeframe. My right hon. Friend asked whether the
Bill applies to Scotland, and in which circumstances. The Bill
does extend to Scotland, but as currently drafted it applies
strictly to cases where a development consent order has been
granted for electricity transmission infrastructure under the
Planning Act 2008. The development consent order process does not
apply in Scotland, except under limited circumstances that do not
relate to electricity transmission. While electricity
transmission is reserved, dispute resolution and other things are
devolved, so in Scotland, there would be an interplay between the
various responsibilities of the different Governments. It will be
the role of the taskforce to develop the full scope of the
proposals.
The hon. Member for North Antrim asked about the Bill’s
application in Northern Ireland. As he said, energy transmission
is devolved in Northern Ireland, as is energy generally, and
notwithstanding the failure so far to convene the Executive in
Northern Ireland, the devolution settlement stays in place. We
only step in reluctantly, when there is no other choice; we have
successfully done so, and I am pleased to see people in Northern
Ireland receiving their energy bills support scheme payments and
their alternative fuel payments this week, either directly into
their bank accounts or through voucher provision.
My Department did a lot of work to ensure we could serve the
people of Northern Ireland, because we could not leave them
without that support this winter, but that is not an indication
that I or the Government have any appetite to fulfil a function
that is properly devolved in Northern Ireland. We respect that,
and we want to see those institutions restored as soon as
possible, because people in Northern Ireland deserve to have the
people they elect delivering the things that have rightly been
devolved for them to deliver for the good of people in Northern
Ireland. I recognise that we would swiftly move from people
welcoming the Minister stepping into a gap to them asking,
“What’s your status? How are you making these rules for us?” That
is why we really want to see the restitution of people in
Northern Ireland determining what happens there.
rose—
I am going to close; I have probably been overly provocative and
overly long on Northern Ireland. Suffice it to say that the Bill
does not apply there, but I will give way to the hon.
Gentleman.
I appreciate the Minister’s point of view, but on a practical
level, if at some point there is not a devolved Government
operating in Northern Ireland, will the Minister extend the Bill
so that compensation payments can be properly covered? The
Minister has the right to do so; he represents the Government of
the United Kingdom.
I am a Minister in the Government of the United Kingdom, and we
have devolution and have devolved certain bits away. I might be
part of the Government of the United Kingdom, but I cannot go in
and take over the function of local planning from democratically
elected local authorities, because they have that function, not
me. I take the hon. Gentleman’s point, but it would be for others
to decide.
I am straying into Northern Irish politics, which I am told is a
difficult thing to do unless one is deeply well informed, so I
will stop there. I have talked enough about it already, so I will
back off swiftly. The main point is that the Government support
the Bill, which will ensure access to alternative dispute
resolution for landowners when land is acquired by transmission
owners. I therefore look forward to working with my right hon.
Friend the Member for North Somerset to support the passage of
the Bill.
I thank you, Mr Hosie, for your excellent chairmanship, and my
civil servants for their hard work. They have not only been
working with my right hon. Friend the Member for North Somerset;
as we know, so much of the work is done by his office, so it is
through the work of my officials and my right hon. Friend’s
office, as well as the occasional appearance by the two of us,
that we have been able to make such progress.
I am grateful to my right hon. Friend the Minister for clarifying
those points. We all accept the need to upgrade the electricity
transmission network, and those Members who have not yet seen
what the new electricity pylons look like are welcome to come
down to the south-west and see for themselves. I find them
incredibly visibly intrusive up close, although not
un-aesthetically pleasing in themselves; how much one objects to
them really depends on how close one is to them.
The point is that those pylons will be rolled out across the
country. One of the roles we have in Parliament is not just to
deal with issues when they reach crisis level, but to anticipate
them. It is therefore important to bring in this legislation
before the matter becomes an issue for most Members of
Parliament, even if they do not yet understand the scale of the
problem they are likely to face. It is a bizarre aspect of
democratic politics that MPs get much more credit for solving a
problem than for preventing one, but we try to live with
that.
9.45am
As all of us on the Committee agree, and as we agreed on Second
Reading, that it is essential that Parliament rebalances the
David and Goliath struggles that individuals face against large
utilities, corporations and conglomerates in favour of the
smaller party. It is quite unacceptable that the only means of
achieving compensation or justice in a dispute with a very large
company is if one is rich enough to go to court. That is where
the importance of the Bill lies: it is about empowerment, and one
of the most important roles of Parliament is empowering our
constituents against those who would seek to bully them because
of their advantage of size or money. To go back to my very first
point, we get occasions when there are those who say, “Don’t
bother going to your Member of Parliament, because they can’t do
anything about it.” The wonderful thing about democracy is that
we can, and today we will.
Question put and negatived.
Clause 1 accordingly disagreed to.
Clause 2
Extent, commencement and short title
Amendments made: 2, in clause 2, page 2, line 4, leave out
“applies” and insert “extends”.
This is a technical amendment replacing the reference to
application with a reference to extent.
Amendment 3, in clause 2, page 2, line 5, leave out
“on the day on which it is passed”
and insert
“at the end of the period of two months beginning with the day on
which it is passed”.
This amendment provides for commencement two months after Royal
Assent.
Amendment 4, in clause 2, page 2, line 6, leave out “and
Gas”.—(.)
This amendment amends the Bill’s short title to reflect its
contents.
Clause 2, as amended, ordered to stand part of the Bill.
New Clause 1
Resolution of compensation disputes in electricity-related land
acquisition cases
“(1) The Secretary of State must draw up proposals for the use of
alternative dispute resolution processes in electricity-related
land acquisition cases.
(2) An ‘alternative dispute resolution process’ is any process
enabling the parties to a dispute to resolve the dispute out of
court.
(3) An ‘electricity-related land acquisition case’ is a case
where—
(a) an order is made under section 114 of the Planning Act 2008
(orders granting development consent), and
(b) the order authorises the acquisition of land for a purpose
connected with the transmission of electricity.
‘Transmission’ in paragraph (b) has the meaning given in section
4(4) of the Electricity Act 1989.
(4) The Secretary of State’s proposals must include proposals for
ensuring—
(a) that alternative dispute resolution processes are available
for determining the amount of compensation to be paid to
landowners in electricity-related land acquisition cases,
(b) that the processes are accessible to landowners without undue
difficulty or expense,
(c) that the processes are operated, and determinations reached,
in a way that is independent of the parties to the dispute,
and
(d) that determinations are enforceable.
(5) The Secretary of State must lay before Parliament a report
containing the proposals drawn up under this section.
(6) Before laying the report the Secretary of State must consult
such persons as the Secretary of State considers
appropriate.”—(.)
This new clause is intended to replace clause 1. It focuses the
proposals which the Secretary of State must draw up on
electricity-related cases rather than gas-related cases. It also
contains a number of drafting and clarity-related changes.
Brought up, read the First and Second time, and added to the
Bill.
Title
Amendment made: 5, in title, line 1, leave out from beginning to
end of line 4 and insert
“Require proposals to be drawn up for the use of alternative
dispute resolution processes to determine the compensation
payable to landowners in certain cases where land is acquired for
the purposes of electricity transmission.”—(.)
This amendment amends the Bill’s long title to reflect its
contents.
Bill, as amended, to be reported.
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